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App-Assisted Day Reconstruction to Reduce Treatment Burden and Logistic Toxicity in Cancer Patients - Aim 3

Completed
Conditions
Cancer
Registration Number
NCT06322992
Lead Sponsor
Daynamica, Inc.
Brief Summary

The goal of this observational study is to develop a mobile app for cancer patients undergoing treatments. In Aim 3, patients will rate the quality of the app using the Mobile App Rating Scale (MARS) and their satisfaction with the three key app features. The outcome of this project will be a final prototype app with 70% of patients indicating an overall MARS score of 4.0 or more and satisfaction with the three features.

Detailed Description

Each year, more than 1.7 million new cancer patients in the U.S. undergo intense, multimodal treatments that that create numerous logistical challenges in managing treatment and everyday life priorities. In the current cancer care system, "logistic toxicity"-the toxic effects imposed by the logistical burden of carrying out cancer treatment-related tasks on patient well-being-has been largely unmeasured and unaddressed. Current methods for measuring logistic toxicity generate retrospective assessments intended for researchers. They do not offer timely information that empower patients to solicit assistance from care providers, employers, family, and friends. Nor do they empower providers to explore the increasingly available treatment options for patient- centered cancer care. This proposal aims to apply a new method-app-assisted day reconstruction-to develop the first digital health tool to enable remote patient monitoring of logistic toxicity, which is the necessary first step towards developing effective care interventions for addressing it.

Our product is both conceptually and technically innovative. Conceptually, the investigators apply the day reconstruction method-a method initially created by well-being researchers for collecting more accurate data on daily life experiences-to collect activity engagement and well-being information related to cancer treatment tasks. Technically, the investigators leverage the existing patented technology and new machine learning techniques to enable novel integration of objective mobile sensing with subjective patient input. Mobile sensing and machine learning will constitute the "assist" that the app provides for day reconstruction in relation to logistic toxicity, significantly reducing recall errors and the need for manual input. The "assist" will also prompt patients to provide information such as subjective well-being ratings that are not detectable by mobile sensing or machine learning, generating more accurate and comprehensive measures of logistic toxicity than existing methods.

The project has three specific aims, including (1) an initial system design based upon input from cancer patients and cancer care stakeholders, (2) prototype development and initial tests, and (3) field tests of the app among 60 diverse patients undergoing treatment for cancer. In Aim 3, patients will rate the quality of the app using the Mobile App Rating Scale (MARS) and their satisfaction with the three key app features: 1) the app's ability to capture out-of-home treatment-related activities and trips, 2) the ease of the interface for inputting home-based treatment-related activities and well-being ratings, and 3) the usefulness of the logistic toxicity summary report. The outcome of this project will be a final prototype app with 70% of patients indicating an overall MARS score of 4.0 or more and satisfaction with the three features. In Phase II, the team will test the efficacy of the app-both separately and in conjunction with care coordination, telemedicine, and home-based treatments-in reducing logistic toxicity and improving treatment outcomes in a randomized controlled trial.

Recruitment & Eligibility

Status
COMPLETED
Sex
All
Target Recruitment
62
Inclusion Criteria
  • cancer patients undergoing treatments
Exclusion Criteria
  • NA

Study & Design

Study Type
OBSERVATIONAL
Study Design
Not specified
Primary Outcome Measures
NameTimeMethod
APP ratingMarch 2024 - May 2025

The investigators will recruit 60 diverse cancer patients, oversampling socio- economically disadvantaged populations, to conduct month-long usability tests followed by exit surveys. Patients will rate the overall app quality using the Mobile App Rating Scale (MARS) that encompasses engagement, functionality, aesthetics, information, and subjective quality. The Aim 3 milestone will be an overall MARS score of 4.0 or above.

APP satisfactionMarch 2024 - May 2025

The investigators will recruit 60 diverse cancer patients, oversampling socio- economically disadvantaged populations, to conduct month-long usability tests followed by exit surveys. Patients will rate satisfaction with the three app features developed in Aim 2 using the 5-point Likert scale. The Aim 3 milestone will be 70% of patients indicating satisfied/very satisfied with each of the three features.

Secondary Outcome Measures
NameTimeMethod

Trial Locations

Locations (1)

Masonic Cancer Center

🇺🇸

Minneapolis, Minnesota, United States

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